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Definition
alter single nucleotide in DNA sequence, simplest just switch bases |
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pyrimidine to pyrimidine or purine to purine, 10x more frequent |
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results in no change of the protein function |
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causes a change in amino acid sequence of a polypeptide |
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produce premature stop codons, will cause truncated protein |
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one or more base pairs added to the wild-type sequence |
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due to loss of one or more base pairs |
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insertion and deletions within the open reading frame, repeated sequences prone to this |
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insertions or deletions within the open reading frame of a gene, often causes truncated protein |
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first line of defense against mutation but not foolproof |
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Triplet Expansion Disease |
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Definition
most involve codon for glutamine (CAG) |
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Chromosomal Abnormalities |
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Definition
chromosomes under large deletions or duplication, inversions of large stretches can also occur |
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sometimes regions from one chromosome transferred to other, sometimes non-homologous chromosomes can exchange large stretches of DNA |
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Definition
happens during normal operations of cell, hydrolysis reactions play an important role |
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removal of amino group (cytosine, guanine, and adenine can all be deaminated) cytosine produces uracil |
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Definition
common result of hydrolysis, the N-glycosyl bond holding base to sugar is broken, leaves missing base abasic site, occurs at high rates for purines |
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Definition
DNA damage caused by outside chemical or physical agents |
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react with As and Cs, results in deamination |
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Definition
H2O2, OH-, O2 can be attached to various bases or backbone of DNA, often result in transversions |
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Definition
addition of alkyl groups to bases or backbone of DNA, can happen at many different positions |
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any substance involved in promoting cancer, benzo apyrene of cigarette smoke |
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DNA reactive compounds that cause chemical changes in DNA |
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screens compounds to see if mutagenic, uses strains of salmonella typhimurium, bacteria exposed to agent and screened for reversion mutations back to wild-type |
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Definition
light at 260nm strongly absorbed by DNA, forms thymine dimers |
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Definition
create oxygen species which can break one or both strands of DNA |
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Definition
catches mistakes proofreading misses, conserved in all cell types, must discriminate between strands, will even catch small indels |
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Definition
methylates it adenines in sequence GATC to mark old strand of DNA, work of protein dam methylase, new DNA isn't methylated, corrected as though the old strand is correct |
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Definition
in E. Coli the genome is scanned by this protein for mismatches, MutL is recruited to the spot which activates MutH, MutH cuts the DNA, exonucleases digest the damaged, Pol I fills the gap and ligase seals the last nick |
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Definition
DNA photolyase captures energy of light and breaks thymine dimers, present in almost all cells |
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Definition
transfer methyl groups off bases |
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Definition
most prevalent type of DNA repair |
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Term
Base Excision Repair (BER) |
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Definition
sees a single damaged base, in bacteria it is recognized by DNA glyosylase which breaks the glycosidic bond holding the base to the sugar, leaves abasic site |
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Definition
recognized by AP endonuclease which cleaves DNA creating a nick, can be removed by nick translation ability of DNA pol I |
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Term
Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER) |
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Definition
don't recognize particular lesion but distortions in the double helix, short segment removed |
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Definition
2 incisions made on one DNA strand |
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UvrA- detects distortions in double helix UvrB- creates a ss bubble around helix UvrC- creates a two nick flanking the lesion DNA pol I- removes fragment and fills gap as DNA ligase comes and seals nick |
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Term
Transcription-coupled Repair |
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Definition
damage recognized by RNA polymerase, will repair damage within genes |
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Definition
repaired by double-stranded break repair pathway, retrieves information from sister chromatid, probably the selective force behind crossing over |
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Translesion Synthesis (TLS) |
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Definition
happens when DNA comes across damage, special DNA pol (Ypol) comes in and sticks something in, do not read anything and prone to error |
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Term
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Definition
copying sequences of DNA into RNA molecule, occurs in nucleus of eukaryotic cell, catalyzed by RNA polymerase |
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-don't need a primer -identified from E. Coli in 1960s -product doesnt stay -large complex |
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Definition
sixth polypeptide sigma actor binds transiently to core and directs enzyme to promoters, sigma plus core forms the RNA polymerase holoenzyme in E. Coli |
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Term
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Definition
pol I ribosomal RNA pol II hn RNA (mRNA) pol III tRNA and other small RNAs ***overall shape like crab claw, 2 large units make up pincers of the claw with activation site containing regions from both |
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Definition
begins at defined sites called promoters (DNA sequences which mark the beginning of gene) -2 strands of DNA: template strand serves as a pattern for RNA synthesis, the non-template or coding strand is identical to the RNA sequence |
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Definition
short distance that DNA is unwound for transcription, usually 17bp in bacteria, +supercoils in front and -supercoils form behind |
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Definition
binding of the RNA polymerase to the promoter, DNA stays double stranded, enzyme bound to one face of the helix |
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Definition
DNA opened up over distance of 14bps, first 10bases made relatively inefficiently and often short transcripts are released to start over, called initial transcribing complex |
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Definition
when an enzyme has added more than 10 bases to the transcript |
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Definition
RNA polymerases don't require a primer, two rNTPs in place to get started, during first 10 bases there is high probability that transcription will start over, after 10 bases RNA more stable |
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Term
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Definition
RNA polymerase binds to DNA and completes transcription of the gene, after 10bp, 8-9bp of RNA bound to DNA |
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RNA polymerase inhibitors |
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Definition
Actinomycin D, Acridine, rifampicin inhibits bacterial transcription, alpha aminitin blocks RNA pol II |
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Definition
occur between -40 and -60, strong in promoters |
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probabilities, initially defined by 2 types of mutations (promoter up made promoter more efficient, promoter down made less) |
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Pyrophosphorolytic editing (kinetic proofreading) |
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Definition
enzyme uses its active site to remove incorrect bases by reincorporating a Ppi, enzyme pauses a little over incorrect bases |
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Term
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Definition
enzyme will backup after a mistake, the RNA product is cleaved and the enzyme tries again, balance between pausing and moving on |
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Definition
less accurate than DNA polymerases, can cause elevated mutation rate in RNA |
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Term
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Definition
E. Coli has 2 classes of termination
Rho independent- most common type of terminator, work solely on basis of shape, composed of GC rich stem loop structure followed by run of Us
Rho dependent- need protein factor called Rho to work, may consist of stem loop to slow down, uses ATP |
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Term
Specific Transcription factors |
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Definition
bind DNA at long distance from various genes |
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Term
General transcription factors |
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Definition
bind at the promoters of all genes |
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Term
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Definition
each polymerase requires TATA binding protein as part of machinery, binds sequence called TATA box if present but only present 1/4 of time |
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Term
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Definition
transcribes only one gene encoding the precursor to ribosomal RNAs, many copies of this gene, has 2 transcription factors |
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Term
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Definition
have 2 parts to core element and UCE (upstream control element), located near start site |
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Term
UBF (upstream binding factor) |
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Definition
transcription factor, binds upstream to control element, UBF recruits factor called SL1 to complex |
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Term
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Definition
binds near the core element and contain TBP and 3 TAFs for pol I, this recruits RNA pol I |
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Term
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Definition
promoters refer to minimal set of sequence elements required to activate transcription (usually 40-60bases) |
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Definition
many located downstream from start site of transcription, promoters contain two sequence boxes, requires 2 transcription factors TFIIIC and TFIIIB |
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Term
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Definition
combine with RNA polymerase to form pre-initiation complex, contains RNA pol II and 6 general transcription factors |
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Term
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Definition
binds near TATA box, complex protein with many subunits, TATA associated factors (TAFs), TBP associates with about 10 TAFs, bind other promoter elements like Inr and DPE |
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Definition
highly conserved, binds TATA box, contacts minor grove of DNA, distorts and bends the double helix |
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Definition
doesn't seem to always be essential, may stabilize binding between TFIID and promoter |
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Term
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Definition
binds next makes some contacts with DNA and BRE as well as downstream of the TATA box, needs TFIID to bind |
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Definition
comes in with polymerase, loosens non specific attractions between DNA and pol II |
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Definition
bind to create closed promoter complex |
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Definition
has helicase activity that unwinds the DNA to form open complex |
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Definition
will form few abortive transcripts then enter elongation, pol III is phosphorylated on its CTD to leave promoter, TFIIE and TFIIH are released |
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Term
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Definition
aid general transcription factors at most genes, seem to have modular design in both yeast and humans, may aid in assembly of general transcription to activate genes |
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Definition
terminates at a T rich sequence located short distance from 3' end of the mature RNA and requires several proteins |
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Term
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Definition
terminates at a terminator sequence downstream of the rRNA precursor and requires several helper proteins |
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Term
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Definition
can terminate anywhere from a few base pairs to several KB away from end of a mature transcript |
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Definition
many RNAs synthesized as biologically inactive precursors |
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Definition
more extensive in eukaryotes than bacteria |
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Definition
capped, tailed, have introns removed, many enzymes involved in processing |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
coding sequences in genes |
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Definition
methylation on 5' ends, extra nucleotide linked by 5'-5' linkage |
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Term
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Definition
last phosphate clipped off the 5'PO4 new RNA, GMP added, then methylated, can be early even, happens within first 20-30 bases, only done on mRNA |
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Definition
typically 80-250 bases long, protects mRNA from enzymatic destruction |
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Term
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Definition
happens after primary transcript triggers cleavage then occurs, there is sequence AAUAAA about 10-30bp before the poly A tail, sequences 20-40 downstream of this tend to be GU or U rich |
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Definition
further processing of RNAs including removal of introns |
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Term
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Definition
huge role in alternative splicing, splice sites may be hidden or marked |
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Definition
different pol A sites many also used to cause production of different gene products |
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3 Sites Important in Splicing |
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Definition
-5' splice site marks the 5' end of intron -3' splice site marks the 3' end of the intron -branch point site found close to 3' end |
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Definition
used for most nuclear genes, 2 steps 1st step-2'OH groups of A attacks phosphodiester bond between first exon and G at beginning 2nd step-3'OH group at the left end of the 1st exon attacks phosphodiester bond between G and end base of second exon |
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Term
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Definition
mediates reactions of nuclear splicing, contains 5 small nuclear ribonucleoproteins or snurps |
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Term
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Definition
contain small nuclear RNA, about 100-200 bases long, each one binds to proteins called Sm proteins |
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Definition
part of spliceosome but not part of snRNP, proteins play important roles in selecting splice sites |
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Term
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Definition
introns have GU on the 5'end and AG on the 3'end, surrounding sequences and structure of the primary transcript may all pay important roles |
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Definition
base pairing between snRNA and primary transcript to select splice sites |
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Definition
recognizes the GU at the 5' splice site, U2AF binds AG at the 3' splice site, this recruits U2 to branch point (ATP dependent) |
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Definition
binds and replaces U1 at the 5' splice site, U6 binds U2, U4 is released |
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Definition
of the A at the branch point attacks the 5' splice site, catalyzed by U6 and U2 |
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Term
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Definition
base pairs with the 5' exon and 3' splice site, 3' splice site is attacked, joins exons together and liberates |
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Definition
some introns removed by alternative spliceosome which recognizes slightly different signals |
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Definition
some introns capable of removing themselves without any help, first discovered in tetrahymena, 2 groups |
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Term
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Definition
splice by totally different pathway, instead of A in the branch point they use free guanine nucleotide and its 3’OH, the free G attacks the 5’ splice site, the G is added to the intron and the exon broken off, shape of key, internal guide sequence aligns the splice sites in particular way to react |
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Term
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Definition
chemistry of splicing and RNA intermediates same as nuclear splicing, RNA still has to fold precise way, may be evolutionary intermediate |
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